Nikkon Holdings Co Ltd
F:1CM
Decide at what price you'd be comfortable buying and we'll help you stay ready.
|
Nikkon Holdings Co Ltd
F:1CM
|
JP |
|
W
|
Waste Connections Inc
SWB:UI51
|
CA |
|
United Overseas Australia Ltd
ASX:UOS
|
MY |
|
JPMorgan Chase & Co
XETRA:CMC
|
US |
|
Lindbergh SpA
F:D8M
|
IT |
|
V
|
Vishay Intertechnology Inc
SWB:VHY
|
US |
|
F
|
Ferrocarril del Pacifico SA
SGO:FEPASA
|
CL |
|
C
|
CBIZ Inc
LSE:0HQI
|
US |
|
N
|
NetApp Inc
LSE:0K6F
|
US |
|
Sonoma Pharmaceuticals Inc
NASDAQ:SNOA
|
US |
|
S
|
Sonic Automotive Inc
SWB:SA8A
|
US |
Nikkon Holdings Co Ltd
Nikkon Holdings is a Japanese logistics group that helps companies move, store, and manage goods. It arranges domestic and international transport, runs warehouses, handles customs paperwork, and supports the flow of parts and finished products through supply chains. Its services are used by manufacturers, retailers, and other businesses that need reliable delivery and inventory control. The company makes money by charging fees for freight forwarding, trucking, warehousing, cargo handling, and related logistics work. In practice, it sits in the middle of the supply chain: customers hand over goods, and Nikkon organizes how those goods are shipped, stored, and delivered to the next stop. That makes its revenue tied more to service contracts and logistics activity than to selling physical products. What sets the business apart is that it is not just a transport company. It combines transportation, storage, customs clearance, and distribution planning under one umbrella, which lets customers outsource a bigger part of their logistics work to a single provider. That integrated role is especially valuable for businesses with complex supply chains, time-sensitive deliveries, or cross-border shipments.
Nikkon Holdings is a Japanese logistics group that helps companies move, store, and manage goods. It arranges domestic and international transport, runs warehouses, handles customs paperwork, and supports the flow of parts and finished products through supply chains. Its services are used by manufacturers, retailers, and other businesses that need reliable delivery and inventory control.
The company makes money by charging fees for freight forwarding, trucking, warehousing, cargo handling, and related logistics work. In practice, it sits in the middle of the supply chain: customers hand over goods, and Nikkon organizes how those goods are shipped, stored, and delivered to the next stop. That makes its revenue tied more to service contracts and logistics activity than to selling physical products.
What sets the business apart is that it is not just a transport company. It combines transportation, storage, customs clearance, and distribution planning under one umbrella, which lets customers outsource a bigger part of their logistics work to a single provider. That integrated role is especially valuable for businesses with complex supply chains, time-sensitive deliveries, or cross-border shipments.